I watched the movie "V for Vendetta" because I can´t not rent the movie "Love and other drugs." Although it isn´t my kind of movie, I found very interesting. It got to hold my attention all the time. The aspects politics are dealt with intelligent. The V speeches are very appropriate and intelligent. We can see in the movie the presence of feelings such as fear of the population who had been imprisoned by the rules of the powerful, greed and rampant authoritarianism of politicians and heads of state, lies of press, courage and desire for justice in the figure of V. Although this isn’t a novel, the movie brings some nuance of love and romance experienced by the protagonist couple. The special effects are very good, but I was penalized with the possibility of destruction of a building as magnificent as the parliament in London, even though it was just fiction. The movie also addresses important ethical issues such as the use of science by unscrupulous people when they do experiments on humans without regard to the harm cause.
The movie "V for Vendetta" shows that revenge is not always a dish best served cold, because in order to avenge themselves can reap pain and martyrdom. In the case of the film, I would say that the character is more to that for vigilante avenger. But experience tells us that vengeance does not lead anywhere, but the sense of justice, that when grounded in sound arguments and motivations help us solve our problems, both individual and collective smoothly and conflicts.
Cool ... The story of a woman named Evey, She is rescued from danger by a man named "V". He starts a revolution against tyranny and oppression, seeking justice for society... I recommend
V for Vendetta (V de Vingança, no Brasil e em Portugal) it is a dystopian thriller from 2006 directed by James McTeigue and produced by Joel Silver and the Wachowski brothers, who also wrote the screenplay. It is an adaptation of the comic series of the same name by Alan Moore and David Lloyd. Set in London in a dystopian society in the near future, Natalie Portman stars as Evey, a working class girl who must determine if your hero has become the major threat that is fighting. Hugo Weaving plays V, a charismatic freedom fighter willing to take revenge of those who disfigured. Stephen Rea lives a detective who begins a desperate quest to capture V before he start a revolution. The film was originally scheduled to be released by Warner Bros. on November 4, 2005 (one day before the 400th anniversary of Guy Fawkes Night), but was postponed and premiered on March 17, 2006. The reviews were positive and the gains in worldwide box office reached over $ 132 million, but Alan Moore, having been disappointed with the film adaptations of two of his other graphic novels, From Hell and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, refused to see the film and subsequently distanced himself from it. The filmmakers removed many of the anarchist themes and drug references that were in the original story and also altered the political message for what they believed would be more relevant to an audience of 2006. In London, a young employee of a TV station named Evey Hammond (Natalie Portman) is attacked by two members of the secret police known as "The Finger-Men", who plan to rape her. She is saved by V (Hugo Weaving), an enigmatic anarchist who wears a mask of Guy Fawkes, a famous English conspirator. V destroys an important building, the Old Bailey, attracting the attention of the government, which sends the troubled Police Inspector Eric Finch (Stephen Rea) to capture it.
O filme é sobre a revolta de uma vítima do abuso do poder constituído na Inglaterra nos últimos 20 anos, por um tirano, o Chanceler Mr. Adam Sutler, chefe do Partido dominador.
Com a instalação de um laboratório de pesquisas biológicas, o Governo Inglês tentou modificar pessoas e transformá-las em criaturas resistentes para o combate na guerra, mas quase a totalidade delas não resistia aos testes, e após uma explosão que destruiu o prédio por incêndio, inexplicavelmente o único sobrevivente das experiências foi o paciente da sala V.
V., o personagem principal, foi transformado em uma criatura diferente, vítima de experiências biológicas de mutação genética. Desenvolveu anomalia celular sanguínea sem classificação, não apresentou patologias do sistema imunológico, desenvolveu sinestesia básica e reflexos altamente avançados, força física e inteligência aguçada, apesar de ter sido destituído de sua aparência, sua pele e face. Por isso aparece sempre de capa, botas e luvas, e usa uma máscara que sugere a face de Guy Fawkes, um homem que, em 5 de novembro de 1605, tentou explodir o Parlamento Britânico.
No dia 5 de novembro 'atual' (c.2025), V. explode o Old Baily, a Casa da Justiça, rememorando o dia no passado, e em cadeia de TV nacional, conclama ao povo para, no ano seguinte, comemorar junto aos portões do Parlamento, o dia 5 de novembro, em favor de uma perspectiva de justiça e liberdade.
V. quer se vingar do que fizeram com ele e ao seu país. Inicia então uma vingança em série, executando todos os que trabalharam no antigo laboratório. Uma jovem, Evey Hammond, torna-se cúmplice involuntária de seus atos e passa a viver com ele, para sua proteção diante do Partido.
O detetive, Mr. Finch, responsável pela investigação e prisão do terrorista, apesar de membro fiel do Partido, começa a desconfiar do abuso do poder após tomar conhecimento do caso do laboratório num relatório escrito pela médica-chefe do programa. Como resultado daquelas experiências, o governo poderia ter sido o responsável pelas tragédias ocorridas em St. Mary’s e Three Waters, onde quase 100.000 pessoas morreram vitimadas por um ataque viral. E o Partido julgou, condenou e executou lideranças religiosas pelo fato.
Um ano depois, V. consegue sua vingança eliminando os principais líderes do Partido e por fim explodindo o Parlamento, ao vivo e em cores diante da população em passeata pelas ruas de Londres caracterizados com V., inclusive com a máscara de Fawkes, pedindo por justiça e liberdade.
Algumas frases significativas.
“We are told to remember the idea and not the man. Because a man can fail. He can be caught, he can be killed or forgotten. But 400 years later, an idea can still change the world.”
“The building is a symbol, as is the act of destroying it. Symbols are given power by people. Alone, a symbol is meaningless, but with enough people blowing up a building can change the world.” (The Parliament as a symbol of dominant power)
“Is that what you really thinks, or what they’d want you to think?”
“People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people.”
“He used to say artists uses lies to tell the truth while politicians used them to cover the truth up.”
“…because while the truncheons may be used in lieu of conversation words will always retain their power. Words offer the means to meaning and, for those who will listen, the enunciations of truth. And the truth is there is something terribly wrong with this country, isn’t there?”
I watched the movie "V for Vendetta" because I can´t not rent the movie "Love and other drugs." Although it isn´t my kind of movie, I found very interesting. It got to hold my attention all the time. The aspects politics are dealt with intelligent. The V speeches are very appropriate and intelligent. We can see in the movie the presence of feelings such as fear of the population who had been imprisoned by the rules of the powerful, greed and rampant authoritarianism of politicians and heads of state, lies of press, courage and desire for justice in the figure of V. Although this isn’t a novel, the movie brings some nuance of love and romance experienced by the protagonist couple. The special effects are very good, but I was penalized with the possibility of destruction of a building as magnificent as the parliament in London, even though it was just fiction. The movie also addresses important ethical issues such as the use of science by unscrupulous people when they do experiments on humans without regard to the harm cause.
ResponderExcluirThe movie "V for Vendetta" shows that revenge is not always a dish best served cold, because in order to avenge themselves can reap pain and martyrdom. In the case of the film, I would say that the character is more to that for vigilante avenger. But experience tells us that vengeance does not lead anywhere, but the sense of justice, that when grounded in sound arguments and motivations help us solve our problems, both individual and collective smoothly and conflicts.
ResponderExcluirCool ... The story of a woman named Evey, She is
ResponderExcluirrescued from danger by a man named "V". He starts a
revolution against tyranny and oppression, seeking justice for society...
I recommend
V for Vendetta (V de Vingança, no Brasil e em Portugal)
ResponderExcluirit is a dystopian thriller from 2006 directed by James McTeigue and produced by Joel Silver and the Wachowski brothers, who also wrote the screenplay. It is an adaptation of the comic series of the same name by Alan Moore and David Lloyd. Set in London in a dystopian society in the near future, Natalie Portman stars as Evey, a working class girl who must determine if your hero has become the major threat that is fighting. Hugo Weaving plays V, a charismatic freedom fighter willing to take revenge of those who disfigured. Stephen Rea lives a detective who begins a desperate quest to capture V before he start a revolution.
The film was originally scheduled to be released by Warner Bros. on November 4, 2005 (one day before the 400th anniversary of Guy Fawkes Night), but was postponed and premiered on March 17, 2006. The reviews were positive and the gains in worldwide box office reached over $ 132 million, but Alan Moore, having been disappointed with the film adaptations of two of his other graphic novels, From Hell and The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, refused to see the film and subsequently distanced himself from it. The filmmakers removed many of the anarchist themes and drug references that were in the original story and also altered the political message for what they believed would be more relevant to an audience of 2006.
In London, a young employee of a TV station named Evey Hammond (Natalie Portman) is attacked by two members of the secret police known as "The Finger-Men", who plan to rape her. She is saved by V (Hugo Weaving), an enigmatic anarchist who wears a mask of Guy Fawkes, a famous English conspirator. V destroys an important building, the Old Bailey, attracting the attention of the government, which sends the troubled Police Inspector Eric Finch (Stephen Rea) to capture it.
V from Vendetta.
ResponderExcluirO filme é sobre a revolta de uma vítima do abuso do poder constituído na Inglaterra nos últimos 20 anos, por um tirano, o Chanceler Mr. Adam Sutler, chefe do Partido dominador.
Com a instalação de um laboratório de pesquisas biológicas, o Governo Inglês tentou modificar pessoas e transformá-las em criaturas resistentes para o combate na guerra, mas quase a totalidade delas não resistia aos testes, e após uma explosão que destruiu o prédio por incêndio, inexplicavelmente o único sobrevivente das experiências foi o paciente da sala V.
V., o personagem principal, foi transformado em uma criatura diferente, vítima de experiências biológicas de mutação genética. Desenvolveu anomalia celular sanguínea sem classificação, não apresentou patologias do sistema imunológico, desenvolveu sinestesia básica e reflexos altamente avançados, força física e inteligência aguçada, apesar de ter sido destituído de sua aparência, sua pele e face. Por isso aparece sempre de capa, botas e luvas, e usa uma máscara que sugere a face de Guy Fawkes, um homem que, em 5 de novembro de 1605, tentou explodir o Parlamento Britânico.
No dia 5 de novembro 'atual' (c.2025), V. explode o Old Baily, a Casa da Justiça, rememorando o dia no passado, e em cadeia de TV nacional, conclama ao povo para, no ano seguinte, comemorar junto aos portões do Parlamento, o dia 5 de novembro, em favor de uma perspectiva de justiça e liberdade.
V. quer se vingar do que fizeram com ele e ao seu país. Inicia então uma vingança em série, executando todos os que trabalharam no antigo laboratório. Uma jovem, Evey Hammond, torna-se cúmplice involuntária de seus atos e passa a viver com ele, para sua proteção diante do Partido.
O detetive, Mr. Finch, responsável pela investigação e prisão do terrorista, apesar de membro fiel do Partido, começa a desconfiar do abuso do poder após tomar conhecimento do caso do laboratório num relatório escrito pela médica-chefe do programa.
Como resultado daquelas experiências, o governo poderia ter sido o responsável pelas tragédias ocorridas em St. Mary’s e Three Waters, onde quase 100.000 pessoas morreram vitimadas por um ataque viral. E o Partido julgou, condenou e executou lideranças religiosas pelo fato.
Um ano depois, V. consegue sua vingança eliminando os principais líderes do Partido e por fim explodindo o Parlamento, ao vivo e em cores diante da população em passeata pelas ruas de Londres caracterizados com V., inclusive com a máscara de Fawkes, pedindo por justiça e liberdade.
Algumas frases significativas.
“We are told to remember the idea and not the man. Because a man can fail. He can be caught, he can be killed or forgotten. But 400 years later, an idea can still change the world.”
“The building is a symbol, as is the act of destroying it. Symbols are given power by people. Alone, a symbol is meaningless, but with enough people blowing up a building can change the world.” (The Parliament as a symbol of dominant power)
“Is that what you really thinks, or what they’d want you to think?”
“People should not be afraid of their governments. Governments should be afraid of their people.”
“He used to say artists uses lies to tell the truth while politicians used them to cover the truth up.”
“…because while the truncheons may be used in lieu of conversation words will always retain their power. Words offer the means to meaning and, for those who will listen, the enunciations of truth. And the truth is there is something terribly wrong with this country, isn’t there?”
“That’s is all I have to say about that.”
I liked it very much.
ResponderExcluirI couldn't stop watching it. I just can't believe she didn't take off his mask.